What Are Springs? Focusing on Industrial Springs
Most spring failures we see at Lily Bearing trace back to the same root cause: the spring was treated as an afterthought. The bearing got carefully...
Table of Contents
High temperature bearings are crucial for furnaces and ovens because they handle extreme heat without failing. They ensure smooth operation, last longer, and reduce downtime in high-heat conditions.
Standard bearings are not designed to withstand extreme heat and may experience deformation, accelerated wear, or premature failure. Their lubricants can also break down, causing poor performance and faster damage.
High temperature bearings are precision-engineered rolling or sliding elements designed to operate reliably at temperatures that would cause conventional bearings to seize, deform, or fail outright.
In furnace conveyors, tunnel ovens, rotary kilns, and heat treatment equipment, bearings must endure not only extreme ambient heat but also rapid thermal cycling, oxidizing atmospheres, and contamination from ash, scale, or process gases.
Broadly speaking, a bearing is classified as "high temperature" when it is engineered to operate continuously above 150°C (302°F). Industrial applications for cement kilns, glass furnaces, and continuous annealing lines may push requirements to 600°C (1112°F) and beyond.
Alloys such as stainless steel and graphite-based materials are commonly used in high temperature bearings. These materials are designed to withstand temperatures exceeding 400°C. These materials stay strong and resist heat, ensuring durability. Graphite helps reduce friction and wear, which makes the high temperature bearings last longer in extreme heat.
Protective coatings, like phosphate treatments, create a tough surface on bearings. This corrosion-resistant surface enhances wear resistance and helps the bearings last longer. These coatings reduce friction and prevent material degradation. This helps the bearings maintain their performance and durability in demanding conditions.
Solid lubricants like graphite or molybdenum disulfide reduce friction in high heat without breaking down. High-temperature greases, made with special oils, stay stable in extreme heat. They keep the high temperature bearings lubricated, preventing failure and extending their life.
Minimal relubrication and less downtime are important in harsh environments to keep things running smoothly. They help reduce the need for frequent maintenance. With high-quality lubricants and coatings, high temperature bearings last longer without needing relubrication. This leads to fewer interruptions and better productivity, especially in tough conditions.
Increased clearances in bearings allow space for materials to expand at extreme temperatures. This prevents stress or deformation, ensuring smooth operation. This extra room allows the bearing components to move freely and maintain smooth operation, even under high heat. It prevents damage and helps maintain the bearing's performance.
Specialized seals or shields are needed in high temperature bearings to prevent contamination from dust, dirt, or moisture. This helps protect the bearing from performance degradation. They help retain lubricants by preventing them from leaking out. This ensures consistent lubrication, reduces friction, and extends the bearing's lifespan.





Standard carbon-chromium steel bearings (e.g., AISI 52100 / GCr15) are heat-treated to a hardness of 58–64 HRC. This hardness is maintained reliably only below approximately 120°C (248°F). Beyond this threshold, a series of failure modes accelerate rapidly:
|
Failure Mode |
Temperature Trigger |
Root Cause |
Consequence |
|
Dimensional Instability |
> 120°C |
Retained austenite transforms, causing steel to grow |
Preload loss, bearing seizure |
|
Softening / Tempering |
> 150°C |
Steel hardness drops below 58 HRC |
Plastic deformation of raceways |
|
Lubricant Degradation |
> 180°C |
Grease base oil evaporates or oxidizes |
Metal-to-metal contact, wear |
|
Cage Failure |
> 200°C (polymer) |
Nylon/polyamide cage melts or chars |
Rolling element scatter |
|
Thermal Creep of Ring |
> 250°C |
Differential expansion loosens fits |
Spinning, fretting, shaft damage |
|
Oxidation / Scaling |
> 300°C |
Standard steel oxidizes rapidly in air |
Surface pitting, loss of geometry |
|
KEY INSIGHT Even a brief excursion to 200°C in a standard bearing can cause permanent ring growth of up to 50 µm — enough to critically alter internal clearances and preload in precision spindle applications. |
Material selection is the single most important decision when specifying a high-temperature bearing. Each material brings a unique trade-off between maximum service temperature, hardness retention, corrosion resistance, and cost.

|
Material |
Max Continuous Temp |
Hardness |
Key Advantage |
Typical Use Case |
|
GCr15 / 52100 Standard |
120°C (248°F) |
58-64 HRC |
Low cost, widely available |
Room-temp & mild heat only |
|
M50 High-Speed Steel |
315°C (600°F) |
60-64 HRC |
Excellent hardness retention at temp |
Jet engines, industrial ovens |
|
M62 High-Speed Steel |
370°C (700°F) |
62-66 HRC |
Superior to M50 at higher temps |
Aerospace, high-temp turbines |
|
440C Stainless Steel |
200°C (392°F) |
58-62 HRC |
Corrosion resistance |
Food ovens, chemical environments |
|
Silicon Nitride (Si3N4) |
650°C (1200°F) |
78 HRA |
Low density, self-lubricating |
Ceramics kilns, glass furnaces |
|
Zirconia (ZrO2) |
600°C (1112°F) |
75 HRA |
Excellent thermal shock resistance |
Tunnel kilns, refractory handling |
|
Carbon / Graphite |
1000°C (1832°F) inert |
N/A (soft) |
Self-lubricating, extreme temp |
Vacuum furnaces, inert-gas ovens |
|
Inconel / Nimonic Alloy |
500°C (930°F) |
35-45 HRC |
Superior oxidation resistance |
Continuous annealing lines |
Not all high-temperature bearings share the same rolling geometry. The bearing type determines load capacity, speed limits, and how well it handles angular misalignment — critical factors in furnace and oven equipment where thermal distortion of frames and shafts is common.
|
Bearing Type |
Radial Load |
Axial Load |
Misalignment |
Best Application |
|
Deep Groove Ball (DGBB) |
★★★ |
★★☆ |
Low |
Small conveyors, fans, dampers |
|
Angular Contact Ball |
★★★ |
★★★ |
Low |
Spindle drives in precision kilns |
|
Cylindrical Roller |
★★★★ |
Low |
Low |
Heavy roller hearth furnaces |
|
Spherical Roller |
★★★★ |
★★☆ |
HIGH |
Rotary kilns, tunnel ovens, dryers |
|
Tapered Roller |
★★★★ |
★★★★ |
Low |
Furnace door hinges, drives |
|
Self-Aligning Ball |
★★★ |
Low |
VERY HIGH |
Long conveyor shafts |
|
Full-Complement Roller |
★★★★★ |
Low |
Low |
Slow, very heavy kiln trunion rings |
|
Sliding / Plain Bearing |
★★★★ |
★★★ |
HIGH |
Ultra-high temp (>600°C) support |
|
PRO TIP For rotary kiln riding rings and support rollers operating above 400°C, spherical roller bearings with an M50 or ceramic inner ring are the preferred configuration worldwide. The spherical geometry absorbs shaft deflection from thermal bowing while maintaining full-load capacity. |
Lubrication failure is the primary cause of premature bearing failure in high-temperature environments. As temperature rises, conventional greases lose viscosity, separate (bleed), oxidize, and ultimately carbonize into abrasive sludge. Selecting the right lubrication strategy is as important as selecting the right bearing material.
|
Grease Type |
Max Temp (Continuous) |
Thickener |
Key Properties |
Typical Application |
|
Lithium Complex |
180°C (356°F) |
Li-complex soap |
Water resistant, good EP |
Baking ovens, food conveyors |
|
Polyurea |
220°C (428°F) |
Polyurea |
Oxidation resistant, long life |
Industrial ovens, motors |
|
Bentonite / Clay |
260°C (500°F) |
Inorganic clay |
No melt point, dry to touch |
Kilns, paint-curing ovens |
|
PFPE (Perfluoropolyether) |
300°C (572°F) |
PTFE |
Inert, chemical resistant, FDA |
Semiconductor furnaces, food ovens |
|
Calcium Sulfonate Complex |
250°C (482°F) |
Ca-sulfonate |
Excellent corrosion resistance |
Steam ovens, moist environments |
When operating temperatures exceed the range of any grease, solid lubricants become the only viable solution. These include:
Graphite powder or graphite-bonded coatings — effective up to 500°C in oxidizing atmospheres
Molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) — excellent at 400°C in dry/inert environments; oxidizes above 450°C
Tungsten disulfide (WS2) — superior to MoS2 at higher temperatures and in vacuum
Hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) — stable to 900°C, excellent for ceramic and refractory-lined furnaces
Carbon / graphite bushings — self-lubricating plain bearings for extreme temp applications up to 1000°C
Different thermal processing industries demand very different bearing specifications. Below is a concise reference for the most common high-temperature bearing applications across industrial and commercial sectors.
|
Application |
Temp Range |
Recommended Bearing |
Material |
Lubrication |
|
Tunnel Baking Oven |
150-280°C |
Deep groove ball / CARB toroidal |
440C SS or M50 |
Polyurea or PFPE grease |
|
Pizza / Deck Oven Conveyor |
200-350°C |
Cylindrical roller or plain bearing |
M50 or stainless |
Bentonite or clay grease |
|
Industrial Annealing Furnace |
250-600°C |
Spherical roller (C4 clearance) |
M62 or Si3N4 hybrid |
MoS2 or graphite paste |
|
Rotary Kiln (Cement / Lime) |
300-500°C |
Large spherical roller, riding ring |
Cast steel + M50 roller |
Open gear grease + graphite |
|
Glass Furnace Regenerator |
400-750°C |
Full ceramic or plain bearing |
Si3N4 full ceramic |
WS2 dry film |
|
Vacuum Heat Treatment Furnace |
200-1000°C (vac) |
Angular contact ceramic |
Si3N4 full ceramic |
PTFE cage, dry or PFPE |
|
Powder Coating Oven |
180-220°C |
Deep groove ball (shielded) |
M50 or 52100 stabilized |
PFPE or high-temp polyurea |
|
Steelmaking Walking Beam Furnace |
300-550°C |
Spherical roller (C5 clearance) |
M50 high-speed steel |
Graphite paste, re-greased weekly |
Selecting a high-temperature bearing is a multi-variable engineering decision. The following seven-step framework guides engineers and procurement specialists through the process systematically.
|
Step |
Factor |
Key Question |
Action |
|
1 |
Temperature Profile |
What is peak vs. continuous temp? |
Define all three: continuous, peak excursion, thermal cycle frequency |
|
2 |
Load Type & Magnitude |
Radial, axial, or combined? |
Calculate dynamic equivalent load P using bearing geometry |
|
3 |
Misalignment Risk |
Will the shaft deflect from heat? |
If deflection >0.05°, specify spherical roller or self-aligning geometry |
|
4 |
Bearing Material |
What is the max service temp? |
M50 for 150-315°C; Si3N4 ceramic above 400°C (see Table 2) |
|
5 |
Internal Clearance |
Will thermal expansion reduce clearance? |
C3 at 150-250°C; C4 at 250-400°C; C5 above 400°C |
|
6 |
Cage Material |
Will the cage survive at temperature? |
Brass or steel cage; PEEK or Si3N4 retainer for ceramics |
|
7 |
Lubrication Method |
Does any grease survive the peak temp? |
Match lubricant to peak temp from Table 4; solid lube above 400°C |
|
Temperature Range |
Bearing Material |
Clearance Class |
Cage Material |
Lubrication |
|
Up to 120°C |
GCr15 / 52100 Standard |
CN or C3 |
Nylon / Polyamide |
Standard lithium grease |
|
120-200°C |
52100 Stabilized / 440C SS |
C3 |
Brass or steel |
Lithium complex / polyurea |
|
200-315°C |
M50 High-Speed Steel |
C3-C4 |
Machined brass |
Bentonite / PFPE grease |
|
315-400°C |
M50 / M62 or Si3N4 hybrid |
C4 |
Machined steel or PEEK |
MoS2 paste / WS2 film |
|
400-650°C |
Si3N4 full ceramic |
C4-C5 |
Si3N4 or carbon-graphite |
WS2 or h-BN solid lubricant |
|
Above 650°C |
Carbon-graphite plain bearing |
N/A |
N/A (plain bearing) |
Self-lubricating (carbon) |
Even the most precisely specified high-temperature bearing will fail prematurely if installed or maintained incorrectly. Heat-cycling, thermal expansion fits, and lubrication intervals all require special attention in furnace applications.
Use induction heating for hot mounting — heat bearing evenly to 80-100°C above room temperature, maximum 120°C for standard grades. Never use open flame.
Verify interference fits at operating temperature — calculate thermal expansion of shaft and housing at maximum operating temperature.
Apply solid lubricant before assembly — for bearings above 300°C, apply a thin coat of WS2 or MoS2 to raceways and cage before installation.
Tighten to torque specification after thermal stabilization — allow equipment to reach operating temperature before final locknut tightening.
Use anti-fretting compound on housings — prevent fretting corrosion on bearings subject to repeated thermal expansion and contraction.
|
Operating Temperature |
Re-lubrication Interval |
Vibration / Noise Check |
Full Bearing Inspection |
|
Up to 200°C |
Every 1,000-2,000 hours |
Monthly |
Every 12 months |
|
200-300°C |
Every 500-1,000 hours |
Every 2 weeks |
Every 6 months |
|
300-450°C |
Every 200-500 hours |
Weekly |
Every 3 months |
|
Above 450°C |
Weekly or after each cycle (solid lube) |
Daily monitoring recommended |
Monthly visual + quarterly full |
|
CRITICAL WARNING Never mix lubricant types when regreasing high-temperature bearings. Lithium and polyurea greases are chemically incompatible — mixing causes rapid thickener breakdown and grease liquefaction, accelerating wear even at moderate temperatures. |
High temperature bearings are perfect for furnaces and ovens because they can handle extreme heat. They use special materials and lubricants that keep them running smoothly and prevent wear. These bearings can also handle heavy loads, maintain accuracy, and resist damage from heat or dirt.
Choosing the right bearing and taking good care of it keep things running smoothly. This reduces unexpected problems, less downtime, and helps your equipment last longer.
For the best high temperature bearings, contact LILY Bearing. We can help you choose the right bearings for your needs and ensure your equipment runs smoothly for longer.
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